Lilly Wachowski, the codirector of the blockbuster Matrix franchise, has had enough of people, specifically Elon Musk and Ivanka Trump, bastardizing the concept of the red pill. In the film, to “take the red pill” means to open one’s eyes to the dark reality of the Matrix. In real life the saying has been co-opted by the right, turned into shorthand for embracing a kind of fringe conservatism. On Sunday, Musk jumped on the trend, tweeting, “Take the red pill,” to followers. Trump responded enthusiastically: “Taken!”

Wachowski promptly replied with a tweet of her own: “Fuck both of you.”

Her response has been retweeted more than 35,000 times. Wachowski, who is trans, quickly followed her comment by plugging the Brave Space Alliance, a nonprofit that supports trans and gender-nonconforming people on the South and West Sides of Chicago.

Her viral response came just one day after another member of the Trump family got chided by Hollywood. On Saturday, Donald Trump shared a fan-made deepfake video of his face superimposed over Bill Pullman’s in the 1996 blockbuster Independence Day. The clip showed President Trump-as-Pullman delivering an inspiring speech to soldiers. “My voice belongs to no one but me,” Pullman quickly responded in a statement to the Hollywood Reporter, “and I’m not running for president—this year.”

Wachowski codirected and cowrote the cyberpunk Matrix films with her sister Lana Wachowski. The series contains three films starring Keanu Reeves as Neo, a hacker who gets drawn into a rebel group after he agrees to take that enlightening red pill. In 2019, it was officially confirmed that Lana was set to cowrite and direct a fourth Matrix movie, once again starring Reeves and Carrie-Anne Moss. The cast will also include Neil Patrick Harris,Watchmen star Yahya Abdul-Mateen II, and Jada Pinkett Smith, who played rebel pilot Niobe in the two Matrix sequels, The Matrix Reloaded and The Matrix Revolutions.

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Alas, Lana didn’t tweet her thoughts about Trump and Musk—though it might be safe to say the Wachowskis are of one mind about the red pill’s unfortunate second life as a conservative metaphor. The red-pill meme was popularized nearly a decade ago by men’s rights activists, according to Wired, later gaining popularity after the blowup of Gamergate, a sexist harassment campaign against women in the gaming world. The meme then spread to believers of racist and anti-Semitic conspiracy theories, Wired notes, before gaining more and more traction in the right-wing world.